Hendrix is psychedelic rock, Berry is Rockabilly, Nirvana is Grunge and Queen opera rock, hard rock... just the post-2000 garbage in the video is pop rock.
@@alguem7937 I suppose that the guy uses "pop" as meaning of popular. - Chuck is popular - Queen is popular - Van Halen is popular - Nirvana is popular - Artic Monkeys is popular - the last band also
@@evh3065 Personally, I believe the beatles explored more genres and styles. It's crazy to me that the band who created Helter Skelter is the same band who created Strawberry Fields Forever and Hey Jude
Hate Dancin is probably the closest thing to the average King Gizzard sound, the middle point between all of the sounds they've tinkered with within the last three years.
Hey, all the way up to mid 2010's was pretty good for rock too, and you can still find some bangers made in the past few years, but I agree, old rock was the peak, we haven't been able to top the 90's, let alone the 70's-80's.
@@keinlieb3818 hell no 70s had Black Sabbath, Queen, Fleetwood Mac, Eagles,Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Clash , Deep Purple , Yes 80s not even close to 70s
60s: The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Elvis Presley etc.. 70s: Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Pink Floyd, Queen, Black Sabath etc.. 80s: AC/DC, Metallica, Iron Maiden, Bon Jovi, Van Halen, Scorpions, Europe, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Guns N' Roses, U2, R.E.M etc.. 90s: Dream Theater, Nirvana, RHCP etc.. 2000s: Avenged Sevenfold 2010-2020s: I Don't know..
2000's Linkin Park, My Chemical Romance, Slipknot,Thirty Seconds to Mars, Blink-182, Sum 41, Avril Lavigne, Tokyo Hotel 2010's Hollywood Undead, Black Veil Brides, Falling in Reverse, Pierce the Veil, The Pretty Reckless 2020's Yungblud, Eyedress, Machine Gun Kelly
This is what I think 50s- Johnny b Goode 60s- a day in the life 70s- stairway to heaven 80s- sweet child o mine 90s-wonderwall (I don’t care what u say) 00s- Can’t stop 10s- do I wanna know 20s- I don’t have the patience to find out
There's a lot more music to the 70s. I guess if you think about it there's a lot more to every gen but 70s was so damn diverse. Like from pink Floyd to deep purple. That was music's prime for me.
The thing is with the Rolling Stones is that they’ve been making music for 6 fucking decades so it’s kinda hard to get a specific decade for them I mean in the 60s they formed, in the 70s it was their hay day which continued on into the 80s
Though there's some debate whether it's dead or not, there has been a definite exponential decline in rock since the 90s. 2000s was alright but not as big as the 90s and past decades but there were a lot of good indie/alternative bands, rock bands in 2010s dropped and it got quite a bit worse, and now there are next to no widely known rock bands (at least not like Nirvana as a 90s example). I know someone's gonna disagree and say "what about bands like Linkin Park and Nothin' but Thieves" but imo they are not as good or abundant as before.
80s the worst for sure then fortunally rock changed into grunge, garage rock and other sub generes that are soo good. but in the middle of 80s was such a shit
It’s like it went full circle with King Gizzard. Back to the psychedelia of the 60’s, I love it. Seems Australia has a huge wave of psychedelic rock right now. King Gizzard, Tame Impala, The Lazy Eyes, The Babe Rainbow, Psychedelic Porn Crumpets, The Murlocs. I was born in the right generation, I have the entire Beatles and Pink Floyd discography at my fingers and all these great new bands continuing on the legacy in their own way
thats why i hate people who say they were ‘born in the wrong generation’, cause all the classics are infinitely easier to access, and theres still new takes and evolutions of genre and art, why limit yourself
@@tassiegamer4516 exactly! Am I sad I can’t experience the classics as they were born - yes, but Im happy to live in the era where I can listen to them all and listen to the new bands they all influenced and I’d take that because now not only do I have a bunch of good older music but a bunch of new music to look forward to
@@tashiguri8329 is not the best king gizzard song, if you want to listen to their heavier stuff check out Nonagon Infinity or Infest the Rats Nest (the first one is an infinite loop album, the second is a trash metal album about contamination and global warning)
Yessir the best time ever for rock I am 13 and in a band look up to all those guys just what a time to live you know wish i was born in that simpler time
The 1960s is the most revolutionary era for music. Most people wouldn't disagree if you use Smells Like Teen Spirit to characterize the 90s. But you would never find a music that truly defines the 60s, this was the period where music changes drastically and where modern music forms its first roots. I would say that The Beatles comes close as being the genre defining musical artists, though it's gonna be a whole lot more difficult if we have to narrow it to a single song.
I actually disagree I think that there are better songs that represent the 70’s & 80’s and that the 90’s had too many different stages of rock to put a song that represented the first half of the 90’s and be done same with the 00’s
the 2020s could be represented with other works with more relevance, like something from Black Country New Road, Wolf Alice, Wet Leg, Maneskin, or The New Abnormal by The Strokes
Rock and roll music was rhythm and blues that they had to call something else in order to sell to the white populace cuz it was made African Americans. Elvis is the "king of rock and roll" cuz he's white, not cuz he was actually the king of it
Elvis capitalized on an existing movement. Not to say he isn’t important, but he cannot take credit for rock and roll. Chuck Berry is right there in the video
@@dustinvoid3922 I agree modern music isn’t bad but I like rock since it’s a new music type to me and I enjoy it more than the mainstream genres today.
Could you imagine, what would be the rock history if people like Ritchie Valens did not have died and did have continue with his music? Which destiny would have rock music?
This guy : *uses actual examples of what popular rock music sounds like in every decade* The comments : "bUt mY fAvOuRiTe tHinG iSn'T oN hErE!!!!!!!1!!!!111!!!11!"
The Changes album is rock, and Hate Dancing could honestly be mistaken for a Supertramp song and they were a rock band. Just because it uses keyboards doesn't mean it's not rock.
90s with Nirvana, long live Punk Rock, this band and masterpiece shall live forever, this band just marked my childhood listening to it when I was only 5, this isn't just music, it's art, masterpiece and a golden memory
As much as I love KGATLW, Hate Dancin' is definitely a pop song, not a rock song. If you wanted to pick a great KGATLW rock song from the 2020s, The Dripping Tap is right there
@@ederrocha7758 Actually, it did. It existed before that too. Ramones and the Sex Pistols are two examples of punk from the 70s. Ramones are considered THE first true punk group. Then there's also the Clash, often considered THE pioneers of British punk, especially thanks to their album Combat Rock (an album FROM the 80s). Bad Religion, Misfits (you'd know them from that black shirt with the skeletal smile), and Social Distortion are other well-known punk groups from the 70s. I'm telling you this because all these groups were active in the 80s too.
@@koziarskif.8665Dejate de tonterías, the beatles fue una banda abierta a la experimentacion, con muchos géneros y sub géneros, que digas que the beatles no es una banda de rock es porque no has escuchando su música, ellos fueron uno de los principales co creadores del metal, y además de que desde 65 al 70 sus álbumes están repletos de canciones de rock